"LIVE AND DIE" WITH GENEVIEVE BELLEMARE
photo courtesy of Aremide
According to Genevieve Bellemare...
"This song was written with Mitchell Froom. He sent me the keyboard and drum intro you hear in the beginning. I remember him either saying something about radiohead or me thinking radiohead. Whatever it was it attracted me. I didn't know if i could do anything with the song because I had the whole radiohead thing in the back of my mind so it was intimidating. But I remember I was home and i was on my couch on the computer and I kept repeating it over and over and over. I finally started mumbling the melody you hear on the chorus 'I live and die, I live and die.' In the next session I had with Mitchell, we were trying to add new parts and new melodies to the song. Mitchell said, 'It sounds like you are saying I live and die, I live and die,' and he said that he really liked that. We both thought it was a cool concept for a song. At first, I thought this is way too dramatic for me to be singing, but then I recorded it actually singing those words, and then it felt perfect. After that, the rest of the lyrics came really easily. 'Live and Die,' I think, is a similar concept to hiding space. But more desecrate lyrically."
A Conversation with Ivan Neville
Mike Ragogna: So, sir, what the heck have you been up to?
Ivan Neville: I've bleen doing a little bit of this, a little bit of that, you know. I'm playing with my band Dumpstaphunk and doing other stuff, a few recording sessions here and there. I guess you know I did this video recently with The Young Presidents.
MR: Yes, and you might say it was a very "Time"-ly video, wasn't it?
IN: [laughs] Yeah, it was called "Time."
MR: Let's talk about The Young Presidents. What is the origin of this auspicious gathering?
IN: These guys were friends with a buddy of mine by the name of Rob Fraboni. Rob Fraboni produced their record, and that's kind of how I got involved. I know Rob, me and Rob have done stuff over the years. He gave me a call initially to come and play on their record, me and some amazing musicians. Anton Fig plays drums on most of it, Blondie Chaplin was on some stuff... Blondie and I have done some stuff together in the past. We both have a connection to The Rolling Stones, which is pretty cool, as does Rob Fabroni. Also Cory Glover from Living Colour, he was involved. Basically, we did a record. A few of us sang songs. Cory sang, Blondie sang, we sang some stuff together, and I sang the lead vocal on the song "Time." Then they contacted me and said my boy Jonathan McHugh, who is a very dear friend that I've known for a long time, he was involved in the making of this video. He had a lot to do with the story line and things of that nature. I got a call that they wanted to do this video in my home town in New Orleans and since I'm singing the song, I could be in it. I'm like, "Absolutely, man." So he came to New Orleans and we shot some cool stuff in a bunch of cool spots and there you go.
MR: Every time I interview you, there's always something new that you're picking up. Did you pick up anything new from this experience that might affect your music creatively?
IN: I'm always trying to pick up and learn stuff. I've been doing the music thing for a long time and I want to keep on learning and keep on picking up and gathering up and borrowing and whatnot. From this, I got an appreciation for some of the sights and sounds of my own city. It was kind of cool that they shot footage down here and had me go and do stuff like be around surroundings that I was comfortable with. They wanted me to be a part of it and they made sure that I was comfortable in my surroundings and it was perfect. That's one major thing I took from it.
MR: What do you think they took from you?
IN: [laughs] I don't know. Hopefully, I added a little something to it, brought a little something to the table. I've got a decent little singing voice, and my charm and my good looks, hopefully that carried me a long way.
MR: [laughs] This is a bit of a new direction for you, so where do you see this leading? Will it open the door to other things?
IN: I have done some live things with the Young Presidents and I probably will do some live things in the future when time permits--there we go with time again--when I'm not doing Dumpstaphunk or various other projects that I may be involved in. But I like those guys--Jake [Hertzog] and Mitch [Kaneff]. They're good musicians and fortunately for me, I got to participate in some cool songs and the music's good. That's always a plus. We do this thing called "music" because we love it and we're lucky that we get to make a living doing it as well. Everything's up in the air. You never know what could come of this.
MR: Ivan, how's your family?
IN: Everybody's cool. I've got two brothers and a sister down here in New Orleans and my dad lives up in New York, everybody's cool. I've got a daughter who lives in California and I've got a fairly new son who lives here in New Orleans.
MR: In your opinion, what's the state of New Orleans these days?
IN: New Orleans is doing well. There's the devastation that occurred here close to nine years ago, and it will never be forgotten. There's some loss that we will never recover, but New Orleans, as a city and as a region and as a people is doing business, man. It's doing great down here. Music's going on, food's going on, and as you can see every year, jazz festivals are killing. Mardi Gras is a pretty good time. New Orleans is rolling. We lost some lives down here when Katrina happened. People lost their homes and had to go other places and start lives elsewhere, so we lost them. We lost a lot of communities, some of the neighborhoods. But people get back up. New Orleans is one of the places where the people here are resilient like that, and they keep going. Things are doing great in New Orleans right now. We're about to get ready for another hurricane season, now. It happens once a year. We'll see what happens this year. Hopefully nothing too bad will happen down here.
MR: Because of the charm and beauty of New Orleans and its very rich history, there are a lot of kids who dream about making music there. Have a lot of new, young artists been arriving in town lately?
IN: Oh yeah, there's always a little rush of cats who might move here from different places or maybe they come out here to go to school and they start digging on the music scene and they try to get involved, there's always some new blood that starts flowing down here. You've got our home-grown youngsters who are doing very well, like Trombone Shorty--they've been around for a while but I look at them like they're young. Rebirth Brass band has been around thirty years, but we're that next generation, we're not as old as my dad and those guys. Then you've got some others that are coming along, you've got a couple of groups that have been around for a while and some up and comers, it's constantly growing around here, the music scene is always evolving, you've got a couple of new bands that can show off or a new group of musicians that start playing around, it's just an ever-evolving thing we've got going on here.
MR: What advice do you have for new artists?
IN: Just do it. Do it often and as much as you possibly can, learn as much as you can about the business aspect of music and just keep doing it, man, hone your craft. Do your thing.
MR: What about Ivan Neville? What would you tell Ivan Neville right now? What's he supposed to be doing?
IN: [laughs] Keep doing it. Keep honing your craft, Ivan. Keep singing, keep praciticing, keep listening. Keep listening. Keep learning.
MR: All right, so what does the future hold for Ivan?
IN: Oh, I've got stuff going on. Dumpstaphunk's continuing to spread the funk--that's my main group I've got going on now with my little cousin Ian Neville, Tony Hall, Nick Daniels III, and we're just continuing to do what we do. We're probably going to be doing some new music very soon, to put out another studio record. We've got some live stuff that we'll be looking at in the near future and there's some other side stuff that I've got going on. We'll just see what happens.
MR: Nice. Is there anything else to mention that we didn't talk about yet?
IN: I can't think of anything off the top of my head but if I think of something I'll call you back. [laughs]
MR: You've got it! You're awesome. Thanks.
IN: Thanks, man.
Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne
HOME VIDEO'S "FORGET" EXCLUSIVE EXPLORED, EXPLAINED
photo credit: Land Coder
"The latest music video from Brooklyn-based indie/electronica duo Home Video. 'Forget' is the lead single from the band's fourth album Here In Weightless Fall, out now on Dash Go. The follow-up to 2010's The Automatic Process, spends a lot of time discussing disenfranchisement, apathy and the intersection of the personal and the political. 'Forget' takes a look specifically at the idea of consumer culture and how we construct and buy into ways of forgetting about real-life stress, in favor of packaged, mindless promises of numbness. Home Video's Collin Ruffino notes, 'We are all a collection of the products we own and the image we cultivate. We are all afraid to engage with one another face to face for fear of the messy unpredictability of human emotion. But I think this causes great psychic pain, for which we invent pharmaceuticals, to dampen that pain, so that we can be useful units of profit-making and perpetuate the cycle.'
"Ruffino also directed the video for 'Forget' with help from Yvonne Jones (Director of Photography/Producer), Nathaniel Cunningham (Editor) and David Gross (Assistant Director). 'The video for Forget tries to encompass many of the themes of the album,' notes Ruffino. 'We tried to tie the political to the personal in the narrative of the album. There is nothing that speaks to this better than the maintenance of the human psyche that our pharmaceutical-embracing society represents.'
"The video for 'Forget' takes a closer look at the role pharmaceuticals play in our modern culture, in that the characters in the video use a 'Forget' chip to wash away the struggles and pains of everyday life and relationships in favor of the monochrome, faceless, easily digested, corporation-saturated modern world. It's wry social commentary, balanced between ominous and satire."
Links:
Website: http://homevideo.fm
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/homevideoband
Twitter: https://twitter.com/homevideoband
A Conversation with The Berman Brothers
Mike Ragogna: Chris and Frank, where did the idea to transplant this group of artists into a Brazilian genre come from and what motivated you to put this project together?
Chris Berman: We were always huge fans of Brazilian music since a very long time, since the eighties. Frank and I were living in London and we were going to these really amazing rave parties at night and there were always Brazilian musicians playing along. Also on the other side, the really beautiful melodic structure of songs, that love of Brazilian music was there all the time. We also have this huge, huge love for those classic, iconic American songs from the sixties and seventies like those of Billie Holiday and Aretha Franklin or Sly & The Family Stone. One day, Frank and I were sitting in Berlin and Billie Holiday was running in the background somewhere from an apartment far away. We could only hear the voice for some reason. It was a beautiful summery day and the idea was born--how would it sound to put some easy going bossa nova beats or some smash salsa beats behind it? Brazilian music is so tasteful, so elegant. It needs an elegant counterpart in the melody. That was when we thought, "What happens if we blend these two worlds together," the beauty of the classic American vocal performances of Billie Holiday or Aretha Franklin or Sly Stone with that sultry, really fantastic intelligent Brazilian backbone.
MR: To be honest, your new recording of "Sexual Healing" is my preferred version now because you've removed the dated electronics and given it this new sensuous world.
CB: For some reason a lot of these songs sound like they've been recorded in Brazil in the first place. It was an amazing experience to go down to Brazil with all these musicians. On the one side they started very naive because they thought, "We have to give the right sound to these songs," but on the other side they had this respect for all of the artists so they knew they had to do it right. "If we go to these classic songs, we have to give all we can in order to make them really sound as beautiful as possible."
MR: The Dave Brubeck and Carmen McRae track was a brilliant merging of three worlds. Can you give us an example of the production process?
CB: The problem was we only had a stereo track on this recording, so we really had to go dig in, take the vocals out and take, for example, the saxophone solo out. Then we went into the studio and kind of did it as if they were part of the room. We let the vocal play and the saxophone play and the band was playing along in the recording room, very similar to how they did the original recording; all in one room. After we had the vocals isolated, it was very important to us to let the band play along in different rooms together like a real recording session and give the natural feel of recording. There are not really too many overdubs. These days, you start with one track and then go to another and another and musicians don't really play along. We really thought in order to give the original vocals that respect, we had to play along with the vocals. We had everybody in one room with a click track to keep the rhythm going and only the vocal. They played along with Carmen McRae singing and Paul Desmond playing the saxophone later on.
MR: You must have had access to some of the multis, though, right?
CB: Yeah. Luckily, we got multi-tracks for a few, for example, we got Sly & The Family Stone's multi-track and Marvin Gaye's multi-track. We really only used the voices. One thing that's amazing to hear is how fantastically these vocals were recorded in the first place, especially with Marvin Gaye. In the eighties, everything was cluttered with delay and reverb and sometimes, I think you don't really hear what a fantastic singer he is in the first place. Having the chance to take his vocals without effects and purely let the musicians play along, I think it enhanced the feeling of them all being together in one room and jamming along in a studio in Rio.
MR: Beautiful. Hey Frank, how are you?
Frank Berman: I'm wonderful. I don't have the best position, that's why I'm quiet.
MR: How did you work together on the project? What were the assigned duties?
FB: We both love music, but I'm more the one trying to talk to the record companies and to find the right studios for the musicians. Christian is the music guy who loves sitting for twenty-four hours, spending night and day in the studio with the musicians, getting the best out of them, getting the best out of the taping. He's very hands-on in the studio and I'm more hands-on with the business. We do the creative part together, so it's more of getting the product out to the right people, finding the right parts, and getting the right song. Each of us have our separate roles but in general, we did everything together. The main decisions we did together and then we split up in separate parts.
MR: Have you worked this way on every other project?
FB: In the beginning, we wanted a band together and that was a disaster because we both were playing and doing the same work. Luckily, I stopped playing and then we started selling records.
MR: So Studio Rio is really the two of you and whatever Rio musicians could be assembled for these projects.
CB: Yes. They're very fantastic musicians, all together about twenty different musicians and four amazing arrangers, too, who really gave that Brazilian feel. Every note on this record is recorded in Brazil. There are no overdubs in New York or London or anywhere else. We really wanted to capture the Brazilian feel and spirit and the authentic vibe.
MR: And having the band play to the vocal kept the authenticity. Nice. Do you have any studio stories?
CB: One little story that I always have to tell because I love it is one of the drummers is named Paulo Braga. He used to be a drummer for all the big records. We called him and as you can hear, we sometimes talk a little fast and things get lost here and there. We invited him to come to the studio to play along with the track "You've Changed," but he, for some reason, misunderstood the fact that he's actually playing to Billie Holiday, so he comes into the studio, he sets up his recording gear, and then we press "record" and the music starts. Everybody plays along and all of a sudden he hears the voice. He thinks that some girl's singing like Billie Holiday, and then all of a sudden, he recognizes, "That is Billie Holiday I'm playing with!" You could see his eyes got really wet; he nearly had tears. For one little second, he skips the beat, and then he plays along all the way to the end and that's the take that we took for the record because it was so emotional. Then later, he was like, "You guys are so crazy, you didn't tell me it was really Billie Holiday." That was a nice moment.
MR: Were there any people who told you while you were putting this together that you were out of your mind?
CB: A lot of them.
MR: There are a couple of songs on the project that feel even more appropriately interpreted in this setting than their own original arrangements. I won't name them to protect the innocent.
CB: [laughs] I know, but I think if you're in Rio or Ipanema at night and the sun is going down and you have a little drink in your hand, that big city urban feel at the beach, that combination is really the feel of the song. It's a Rio night song. It's that cool, drive around with the windows open at the water feel. It kind of had to be done that way down there, it's really funny.
MR: You took on a song that was originally recorded reggae, Johnny Nash's "I Can See Clearly Now," and the jazz-islandy Bill Withers hit, "Lovely Day." I was surprised to see how naturally they were prone to go further south than Jamaica and the Caribbean.
CB: [laughs] We tried a lot of songs, so the ones you hear are the ones that really worked out, the ones the musicians and arrangers felt were fantastic. We felt, "Oh wow, this is the great combination between the authentic Brazilian sound and something the Western mentality can enjoy, too." We have both worlds going. The Brazilians are proud of it and we think, "Wow, this is a hit, it's fantastic." These songs really work perfectly to bring them even more south. They're already so positive lyrically and musically enchanting, so that really helped to find the right arrangement around them.
FB: Not every song did work in a Brazilian arrangement, so we also had a few where we decided they should not get on the record.
MR: Out of curiosity, what were a couple of those?
FB: I'd prefer not to name any, but definitely, a lot don't work because of rhythms or speeds. There's definitely a fine line between where it really sounds convincing and perfect or where it sounds more like a cover band. We only took the songs that really made a great impression.
MR: I'm surprised that "Don't Stop Believing" by Journey didn't make the cut. An oversight?
Both: [laughs]
FB: That was our number one choice!
MR: Another thing that was amazing was your taking the squarest possible recording of the project, Andy Williams' take on "Music To Watch Girls By," and you hipped it up.
FB: A big credit really goes to Rio because we had this place we called our local office there. It was a coffee shop one street away from the ocean. We had our laptops with us and tons of songs and we were sitting there in the right mood and the right atmosphere and we'd listen to the songs and decide, "This could work, this could work." That's why a lot of surprising songs are on the list that wouldn't have worked if we'd done the project in America. You need that Brazilian atmosphere, the cars dirivng by with the Brazilian music coming out of them. That's where you get these inspirations.
MR: And there are a couple of songs where the horns are playing straight through. When I heard that, I thought, "Boy, that's a lot of horns." Then I realized you guys were trying to capture the power of what was going on in the arrangement, so the horn attacks expressed it in a way that no other instrument would have been able to.
CB: Sometimes the backbeat in Brazil is subtle, it's sometimes hard to create really big excitement with a Brazilian beat. So we took the horns to give a little element of intensity and drama to that. But really the funny thing is that the Brazilian horn arrangers did even more arrangements, so we had to mute a lot of things.
MR: Are any of the artists you used aware of this project's final results yet?
FB: Yes, Bill Withers and his people are very, very happy. We had to get rights from all the artists and so far, no complaints at all.
MR: Where is this heading? Might Studio Rio put out volumes of reworks over the next ten years?
FB: We have a few great ideas for a second album. We have to do the second album because there's one or two great songs we couldn't finish in time. It will be an ongoing ten piece collection. The second part, I think, will be very nice.
MR: Will Studio Rio move from label to label to explore the potential of different catalogs in the future?
FB: No, I think we're very happy. The Sony catalog is ongoing and really beautiful, there is so much stuff. We can even move a little up in the age or a little back in the age. There are many different approaches if it comes to a second part, but we're very happy where we are.
MR: I made a joke about using Journey earlier, but there may really be some rock that may surprise you, for instance Bruce Springsteen or Bob Dylan or someone similar.
FB: We have already one totally crazy one. When people hear the combination, they think it's crazy, but it works great. We'll save it for next year.
MR: What advice do you have for new artists?
FB: Be very independent, be responsible for your own career, find a good team around you and persistence and talent is equal in these days.
CB: I think that's something. I have a friend here, she's so talented and maybe fifteen years ago, she would've been picked up by a major label and had a deal. But now, she's just lacking that last drive of intesity to go out and really go for yourself. I think she will not make it because of that. There's another friend I have and she's a singer-songwriter and maybe her talent is not as really wonderful, but she's so on her career. She does everything right to put herself as an artist out there and I think she will make it. I think in these days where independent artists have such a great opportunity, I think the industry is creating a lot of problems, but also creating a lot of opportunity for young artists. If they use the new world as their tool, they can really go far.
Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne
ABOUT DREAM ALIVE'S EXCLUSIVE "SEE YOU TONIGHT"
photo credit: Irving Ong
According to Dream Alive's team...
"Los Angeles-based rock band Dream Alive--Nik Phoeniks (lead vocals / keyboard), Ramon Ryder (rhythm guitar / vocals), Karan Parikh (lead guitar / vocals), Martin Fredriksson (bass) and Stanley Love (drums)--is set to release its debut album, Before The Dawn, on July 29th. The record features eight soaring tracks melding sounds ranging from psychedelic to cinematic, bridging the musicality between the band's classic rock roots in Journey and Pink Floyd and their modern rock influences of Muse and Coldplay."
"'See You Tonight' is a high-energy, melodic tune that reflects the feelings of longing, lust and excitement,' explains Dream Alive's Ramon Ryder. 'It's the musical representation of the butterflies you feel in your stomach when thinking of someone you really like. The video shows the band performing inside a dark warehouse and outside on the sunny streets of downtown Los Angeles. We love how the two locations are both simultaneously gritty and beautiful, reflecting the highs and lows of love.'"
https://www.dreamalivemusic.com
photo courtesy of Aremide
According to Genevieve Bellemare...
"This song was written with Mitchell Froom. He sent me the keyboard and drum intro you hear in the beginning. I remember him either saying something about radiohead or me thinking radiohead. Whatever it was it attracted me. I didn't know if i could do anything with the song because I had the whole radiohead thing in the back of my mind so it was intimidating. But I remember I was home and i was on my couch on the computer and I kept repeating it over and over and over. I finally started mumbling the melody you hear on the chorus 'I live and die, I live and die.' In the next session I had with Mitchell, we were trying to add new parts and new melodies to the song. Mitchell said, 'It sounds like you are saying I live and die, I live and die,' and he said that he really liked that. We both thought it was a cool concept for a song. At first, I thought this is way too dramatic for me to be singing, but then I recorded it actually singing those words, and then it felt perfect. After that, the rest of the lyrics came really easily. 'Live and Die,' I think, is a similar concept to hiding space. But more desecrate lyrically."
A Conversation with Ivan Neville
Mike Ragogna: So, sir, what the heck have you been up to?
Ivan Neville: I've bleen doing a little bit of this, a little bit of that, you know. I'm playing with my band Dumpstaphunk and doing other stuff, a few recording sessions here and there. I guess you know I did this video recently with The Young Presidents.
MR: Yes, and you might say it was a very "Time"-ly video, wasn't it?
IN: [laughs] Yeah, it was called "Time."
MR: Let's talk about The Young Presidents. What is the origin of this auspicious gathering?
IN: These guys were friends with a buddy of mine by the name of Rob Fraboni. Rob Fraboni produced their record, and that's kind of how I got involved. I know Rob, me and Rob have done stuff over the years. He gave me a call initially to come and play on their record, me and some amazing musicians. Anton Fig plays drums on most of it, Blondie Chaplin was on some stuff... Blondie and I have done some stuff together in the past. We both have a connection to The Rolling Stones, which is pretty cool, as does Rob Fabroni. Also Cory Glover from Living Colour, he was involved. Basically, we did a record. A few of us sang songs. Cory sang, Blondie sang, we sang some stuff together, and I sang the lead vocal on the song "Time." Then they contacted me and said my boy Jonathan McHugh, who is a very dear friend that I've known for a long time, he was involved in the making of this video. He had a lot to do with the story line and things of that nature. I got a call that they wanted to do this video in my home town in New Orleans and since I'm singing the song, I could be in it. I'm like, "Absolutely, man." So he came to New Orleans and we shot some cool stuff in a bunch of cool spots and there you go.
MR: Every time I interview you, there's always something new that you're picking up. Did you pick up anything new from this experience that might affect your music creatively?
IN: I'm always trying to pick up and learn stuff. I've been doing the music thing for a long time and I want to keep on learning and keep on picking up and gathering up and borrowing and whatnot. From this, I got an appreciation for some of the sights and sounds of my own city. It was kind of cool that they shot footage down here and had me go and do stuff like be around surroundings that I was comfortable with. They wanted me to be a part of it and they made sure that I was comfortable in my surroundings and it was perfect. That's one major thing I took from it.
MR: What do you think they took from you?
IN: [laughs] I don't know. Hopefully, I added a little something to it, brought a little something to the table. I've got a decent little singing voice, and my charm and my good looks, hopefully that carried me a long way.
MR: [laughs] This is a bit of a new direction for you, so where do you see this leading? Will it open the door to other things?
IN: I have done some live things with the Young Presidents and I probably will do some live things in the future when time permits--there we go with time again--when I'm not doing Dumpstaphunk or various other projects that I may be involved in. But I like those guys--Jake [Hertzog] and Mitch [Kaneff]. They're good musicians and fortunately for me, I got to participate in some cool songs and the music's good. That's always a plus. We do this thing called "music" because we love it and we're lucky that we get to make a living doing it as well. Everything's up in the air. You never know what could come of this.
MR: Ivan, how's your family?
IN: Everybody's cool. I've got two brothers and a sister down here in New Orleans and my dad lives up in New York, everybody's cool. I've got a daughter who lives in California and I've got a fairly new son who lives here in New Orleans.
MR: In your opinion, what's the state of New Orleans these days?
IN: New Orleans is doing well. There's the devastation that occurred here close to nine years ago, and it will never be forgotten. There's some loss that we will never recover, but New Orleans, as a city and as a region and as a people is doing business, man. It's doing great down here. Music's going on, food's going on, and as you can see every year, jazz festivals are killing. Mardi Gras is a pretty good time. New Orleans is rolling. We lost some lives down here when Katrina happened. People lost their homes and had to go other places and start lives elsewhere, so we lost them. We lost a lot of communities, some of the neighborhoods. But people get back up. New Orleans is one of the places where the people here are resilient like that, and they keep going. Things are doing great in New Orleans right now. We're about to get ready for another hurricane season, now. It happens once a year. We'll see what happens this year. Hopefully nothing too bad will happen down here.
MR: Because of the charm and beauty of New Orleans and its very rich history, there are a lot of kids who dream about making music there. Have a lot of new, young artists been arriving in town lately?
IN: Oh yeah, there's always a little rush of cats who might move here from different places or maybe they come out here to go to school and they start digging on the music scene and they try to get involved, there's always some new blood that starts flowing down here. You've got our home-grown youngsters who are doing very well, like Trombone Shorty--they've been around for a while but I look at them like they're young. Rebirth Brass band has been around thirty years, but we're that next generation, we're not as old as my dad and those guys. Then you've got some others that are coming along, you've got a couple of groups that have been around for a while and some up and comers, it's constantly growing around here, the music scene is always evolving, you've got a couple of new bands that can show off or a new group of musicians that start playing around, it's just an ever-evolving thing we've got going on here.
MR: What advice do you have for new artists?
IN: Just do it. Do it often and as much as you possibly can, learn as much as you can about the business aspect of music and just keep doing it, man, hone your craft. Do your thing.
MR: What about Ivan Neville? What would you tell Ivan Neville right now? What's he supposed to be doing?
IN: [laughs] Keep doing it. Keep honing your craft, Ivan. Keep singing, keep praciticing, keep listening. Keep listening. Keep learning.
MR: All right, so what does the future hold for Ivan?
IN: Oh, I've got stuff going on. Dumpstaphunk's continuing to spread the funk--that's my main group I've got going on now with my little cousin Ian Neville, Tony Hall, Nick Daniels III, and we're just continuing to do what we do. We're probably going to be doing some new music very soon, to put out another studio record. We've got some live stuff that we'll be looking at in the near future and there's some other side stuff that I've got going on. We'll just see what happens.
MR: Nice. Is there anything else to mention that we didn't talk about yet?
IN: I can't think of anything off the top of my head but if I think of something I'll call you back. [laughs]
MR: You've got it! You're awesome. Thanks.
IN: Thanks, man.
Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne
HOME VIDEO'S "FORGET" EXCLUSIVE EXPLORED, EXPLAINED
photo credit: Land Coder
"The latest music video from Brooklyn-based indie/electronica duo Home Video. 'Forget' is the lead single from the band's fourth album Here In Weightless Fall, out now on Dash Go. The follow-up to 2010's The Automatic Process, spends a lot of time discussing disenfranchisement, apathy and the intersection of the personal and the political. 'Forget' takes a look specifically at the idea of consumer culture and how we construct and buy into ways of forgetting about real-life stress, in favor of packaged, mindless promises of numbness. Home Video's Collin Ruffino notes, 'We are all a collection of the products we own and the image we cultivate. We are all afraid to engage with one another face to face for fear of the messy unpredictability of human emotion. But I think this causes great psychic pain, for which we invent pharmaceuticals, to dampen that pain, so that we can be useful units of profit-making and perpetuate the cycle.'
"Ruffino also directed the video for 'Forget' with help from Yvonne Jones (Director of Photography/Producer), Nathaniel Cunningham (Editor) and David Gross (Assistant Director). 'The video for Forget tries to encompass many of the themes of the album,' notes Ruffino. 'We tried to tie the political to the personal in the narrative of the album. There is nothing that speaks to this better than the maintenance of the human psyche that our pharmaceutical-embracing society represents.'
"The video for 'Forget' takes a closer look at the role pharmaceuticals play in our modern culture, in that the characters in the video use a 'Forget' chip to wash away the struggles and pains of everyday life and relationships in favor of the monochrome, faceless, easily digested, corporation-saturated modern world. It's wry social commentary, balanced between ominous and satire."
Links:
Website: http://homevideo.fm
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/homevideoband
Twitter: https://twitter.com/homevideoband
A Conversation with The Berman Brothers
Mike Ragogna: Chris and Frank, where did the idea to transplant this group of artists into a Brazilian genre come from and what motivated you to put this project together?
Chris Berman: We were always huge fans of Brazilian music since a very long time, since the eighties. Frank and I were living in London and we were going to these really amazing rave parties at night and there were always Brazilian musicians playing along. Also on the other side, the really beautiful melodic structure of songs, that love of Brazilian music was there all the time. We also have this huge, huge love for those classic, iconic American songs from the sixties and seventies like those of Billie Holiday and Aretha Franklin or Sly & The Family Stone. One day, Frank and I were sitting in Berlin and Billie Holiday was running in the background somewhere from an apartment far away. We could only hear the voice for some reason. It was a beautiful summery day and the idea was born--how would it sound to put some easy going bossa nova beats or some smash salsa beats behind it? Brazilian music is so tasteful, so elegant. It needs an elegant counterpart in the melody. That was when we thought, "What happens if we blend these two worlds together," the beauty of the classic American vocal performances of Billie Holiday or Aretha Franklin or Sly Stone with that sultry, really fantastic intelligent Brazilian backbone.
MR: To be honest, your new recording of "Sexual Healing" is my preferred version now because you've removed the dated electronics and given it this new sensuous world.
CB: For some reason a lot of these songs sound like they've been recorded in Brazil in the first place. It was an amazing experience to go down to Brazil with all these musicians. On the one side they started very naive because they thought, "We have to give the right sound to these songs," but on the other side they had this respect for all of the artists so they knew they had to do it right. "If we go to these classic songs, we have to give all we can in order to make them really sound as beautiful as possible."
MR: The Dave Brubeck and Carmen McRae track was a brilliant merging of three worlds. Can you give us an example of the production process?
CB: The problem was we only had a stereo track on this recording, so we really had to go dig in, take the vocals out and take, for example, the saxophone solo out. Then we went into the studio and kind of did it as if they were part of the room. We let the vocal play and the saxophone play and the band was playing along in the recording room, very similar to how they did the original recording; all in one room. After we had the vocals isolated, it was very important to us to let the band play along in different rooms together like a real recording session and give the natural feel of recording. There are not really too many overdubs. These days, you start with one track and then go to another and another and musicians don't really play along. We really thought in order to give the original vocals that respect, we had to play along with the vocals. We had everybody in one room with a click track to keep the rhythm going and only the vocal. They played along with Carmen McRae singing and Paul Desmond playing the saxophone later on.
MR: You must have had access to some of the multis, though, right?
CB: Yeah. Luckily, we got multi-tracks for a few, for example, we got Sly & The Family Stone's multi-track and Marvin Gaye's multi-track. We really only used the voices. One thing that's amazing to hear is how fantastically these vocals were recorded in the first place, especially with Marvin Gaye. In the eighties, everything was cluttered with delay and reverb and sometimes, I think you don't really hear what a fantastic singer he is in the first place. Having the chance to take his vocals without effects and purely let the musicians play along, I think it enhanced the feeling of them all being together in one room and jamming along in a studio in Rio.
MR: Beautiful. Hey Frank, how are you?
Frank Berman: I'm wonderful. I don't have the best position, that's why I'm quiet.
MR: How did you work together on the project? What were the assigned duties?
FB: We both love music, but I'm more the one trying to talk to the record companies and to find the right studios for the musicians. Christian is the music guy who loves sitting for twenty-four hours, spending night and day in the studio with the musicians, getting the best out of them, getting the best out of the taping. He's very hands-on in the studio and I'm more hands-on with the business. We do the creative part together, so it's more of getting the product out to the right people, finding the right parts, and getting the right song. Each of us have our separate roles but in general, we did everything together. The main decisions we did together and then we split up in separate parts.
MR: Have you worked this way on every other project?
FB: In the beginning, we wanted a band together and that was a disaster because we both were playing and doing the same work. Luckily, I stopped playing and then we started selling records.
MR: So Studio Rio is really the two of you and whatever Rio musicians could be assembled for these projects.
CB: Yes. They're very fantastic musicians, all together about twenty different musicians and four amazing arrangers, too, who really gave that Brazilian feel. Every note on this record is recorded in Brazil. There are no overdubs in New York or London or anywhere else. We really wanted to capture the Brazilian feel and spirit and the authentic vibe.
MR: And having the band play to the vocal kept the authenticity. Nice. Do you have any studio stories?
CB: One little story that I always have to tell because I love it is one of the drummers is named Paulo Braga. He used to be a drummer for all the big records. We called him and as you can hear, we sometimes talk a little fast and things get lost here and there. We invited him to come to the studio to play along with the track "You've Changed," but he, for some reason, misunderstood the fact that he's actually playing to Billie Holiday, so he comes into the studio, he sets up his recording gear, and then we press "record" and the music starts. Everybody plays along and all of a sudden he hears the voice. He thinks that some girl's singing like Billie Holiday, and then all of a sudden, he recognizes, "That is Billie Holiday I'm playing with!" You could see his eyes got really wet; he nearly had tears. For one little second, he skips the beat, and then he plays along all the way to the end and that's the take that we took for the record because it was so emotional. Then later, he was like, "You guys are so crazy, you didn't tell me it was really Billie Holiday." That was a nice moment.
MR: Were there any people who told you while you were putting this together that you were out of your mind?
CB: A lot of them.
MR: There are a couple of songs on the project that feel even more appropriately interpreted in this setting than their own original arrangements. I won't name them to protect the innocent.
CB: [laughs] I know, but I think if you're in Rio or Ipanema at night and the sun is going down and you have a little drink in your hand, that big city urban feel at the beach, that combination is really the feel of the song. It's a Rio night song. It's that cool, drive around with the windows open at the water feel. It kind of had to be done that way down there, it's really funny.
MR: You took on a song that was originally recorded reggae, Johnny Nash's "I Can See Clearly Now," and the jazz-islandy Bill Withers hit, "Lovely Day." I was surprised to see how naturally they were prone to go further south than Jamaica and the Caribbean.
CB: [laughs] We tried a lot of songs, so the ones you hear are the ones that really worked out, the ones the musicians and arrangers felt were fantastic. We felt, "Oh wow, this is the great combination between the authentic Brazilian sound and something the Western mentality can enjoy, too." We have both worlds going. The Brazilians are proud of it and we think, "Wow, this is a hit, it's fantastic." These songs really work perfectly to bring them even more south. They're already so positive lyrically and musically enchanting, so that really helped to find the right arrangement around them.
FB: Not every song did work in a Brazilian arrangement, so we also had a few where we decided they should not get on the record.
MR: Out of curiosity, what were a couple of those?
FB: I'd prefer not to name any, but definitely, a lot don't work because of rhythms or speeds. There's definitely a fine line between where it really sounds convincing and perfect or where it sounds more like a cover band. We only took the songs that really made a great impression.
MR: I'm surprised that "Don't Stop Believing" by Journey didn't make the cut. An oversight?
Both: [laughs]
FB: That was our number one choice!
MR: Another thing that was amazing was your taking the squarest possible recording of the project, Andy Williams' take on "Music To Watch Girls By," and you hipped it up.
FB: A big credit really goes to Rio because we had this place we called our local office there. It was a coffee shop one street away from the ocean. We had our laptops with us and tons of songs and we were sitting there in the right mood and the right atmosphere and we'd listen to the songs and decide, "This could work, this could work." That's why a lot of surprising songs are on the list that wouldn't have worked if we'd done the project in America. You need that Brazilian atmosphere, the cars dirivng by with the Brazilian music coming out of them. That's where you get these inspirations.
MR: And there are a couple of songs where the horns are playing straight through. When I heard that, I thought, "Boy, that's a lot of horns." Then I realized you guys were trying to capture the power of what was going on in the arrangement, so the horn attacks expressed it in a way that no other instrument would have been able to.
CB: Sometimes the backbeat in Brazil is subtle, it's sometimes hard to create really big excitement with a Brazilian beat. So we took the horns to give a little element of intensity and drama to that. But really the funny thing is that the Brazilian horn arrangers did even more arrangements, so we had to mute a lot of things.
MR: Are any of the artists you used aware of this project's final results yet?
FB: Yes, Bill Withers and his people are very, very happy. We had to get rights from all the artists and so far, no complaints at all.
MR: Where is this heading? Might Studio Rio put out volumes of reworks over the next ten years?
FB: We have a few great ideas for a second album. We have to do the second album because there's one or two great songs we couldn't finish in time. It will be an ongoing ten piece collection. The second part, I think, will be very nice.
MR: Will Studio Rio move from label to label to explore the potential of different catalogs in the future?
FB: No, I think we're very happy. The Sony catalog is ongoing and really beautiful, there is so much stuff. We can even move a little up in the age or a little back in the age. There are many different approaches if it comes to a second part, but we're very happy where we are.
MR: I made a joke about using Journey earlier, but there may really be some rock that may surprise you, for instance Bruce Springsteen or Bob Dylan or someone similar.
FB: We have already one totally crazy one. When people hear the combination, they think it's crazy, but it works great. We'll save it for next year.
MR: What advice do you have for new artists?
FB: Be very independent, be responsible for your own career, find a good team around you and persistence and talent is equal in these days.
CB: I think that's something. I have a friend here, she's so talented and maybe fifteen years ago, she would've been picked up by a major label and had a deal. But now, she's just lacking that last drive of intesity to go out and really go for yourself. I think she will not make it because of that. There's another friend I have and she's a singer-songwriter and maybe her talent is not as really wonderful, but she's so on her career. She does everything right to put herself as an artist out there and I think she will make it. I think in these days where independent artists have such a great opportunity, I think the industry is creating a lot of problems, but also creating a lot of opportunity for young artists. If they use the new world as their tool, they can really go far.
Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne
ABOUT DREAM ALIVE'S EXCLUSIVE "SEE YOU TONIGHT"
photo credit: Irving Ong
According to Dream Alive's team...
"Los Angeles-based rock band Dream Alive--Nik Phoeniks (lead vocals / keyboard), Ramon Ryder (rhythm guitar / vocals), Karan Parikh (lead guitar / vocals), Martin Fredriksson (bass) and Stanley Love (drums)--is set to release its debut album, Before The Dawn, on July 29th. The record features eight soaring tracks melding sounds ranging from psychedelic to cinematic, bridging the musicality between the band's classic rock roots in Journey and Pink Floyd and their modern rock influences of Muse and Coldplay."
"'See You Tonight' is a high-energy, melodic tune that reflects the feelings of longing, lust and excitement,' explains Dream Alive's Ramon Ryder. 'It's the musical representation of the butterflies you feel in your stomach when thinking of someone you really like. The video shows the band performing inside a dark warehouse and outside on the sunny streets of downtown Los Angeles. We love how the two locations are both simultaneously gritty and beautiful, reflecting the highs and lows of love.'"
https://www.dreamalivemusic.com